Social Media Wiki

How One “Viral” Video Can Save Lives


[If you can't see the video above, click here to view it on YouTube.]

I’ve talked about the concept of viral videos in the past, most recently, in an article I wrote for iMedia Connection called, “The world’s worst digital marketing advice.” In fact, one of the pieces of advice to avoid that I had in the article was: “You should make a viral video.” Here’s what I had to say on the issue:

“This is one of my giant pet peeves. Maybe I can stop people from saying this once and for all right now. Here goes: You don’t make a viral video. A video can become viral or “go viral.” But it’s not up to you whether or not a video you create becomes viral; it’s up to us.

A video (or anything else) only becomes viral if people share it with others and those people do the same. There are ways you can increase the likelihood that your content goes viral, which I won’t cover here. However, the No. 1 thing is to make content that’s really good. Be honest: Would you share the video your marketing team just whipped up with your friends? No? Then why should I share it with mine?”

The critical part in here is the idea that you don’t make a viral video, it becomes viral. So, go ahead a make a video, but don’t make it with the expectation that it will become a “viral video.” Sure, do all you can to maximize the number of people who see it and spread the word about it as best you can, but focus on making a good video first. The reason why 99.999999999% of videos never become “viral” is because they are terrible videos. Priority number one if you hope to create a video that becomes viral is to make a good great video. Don’t skip this step.

Last week, my friend Manny Hernandez, founder of  TuDiabetes and the Diabetes Hands Foundation, filled me in on an initiative they have going on for World Diabetes Day (November 14). It’s called “The Big Blue Test.” The idea is simple: encourage people with diabetes to test their blood sugar, exercise, and test it again. People are then encouraged to share their findings with the world. It turns out that many people with diabetes don’t test their blood sugar often enough and even fewer know the positive impact that exercise can have on controlling blood sugar. It’s a great awareness idea supported by a simple concept that can have a profound impact on the health of a lot of people with diabetes. It’s a compliance message wrapped up in an interesting “social” initiative.

Where does the video come in? Well, to spread the word about the test, they created a video that explains the concept. What’s more, for every view of the video up to 100,000, Roche will make a donation to the Diabetes Hands Foundation up to $75,000. They’ll use the money to help the Life For a Child program, run by the International Diabetes Federation, and Insulin For Life. These two global, humanitarian organizations provide diabetes medication and supplies to children in the world’s poorest countries…a great cause to be sure. To give you an idea of how far $75,000 goes, in Ecuador, for example, less than $50 keeps a person needing insulin alive for an entire year (insulin for the program is donated by pharma with the money paying for delivery).

So, why am I sharing this with you?

There are a few reasons actually. First, I’d like to see Roche spend $75,000 and to have that money help save some lives and I know that my readers will help them spend a little of that by watching and sharing the video. Second, this is a strong campaign that we can all learn a little bit from. Here’s what you should be taking note of:

  • A low commitment way to get people involved. If you ask people to do too much, they won’t do it. That’s life. So, asking someone to watch a video isn’t too taxing. Even the challenge to people with diabetes isn’t that big…test, exercise, test, share. Simple.
  • Make a great video. This video is great. It moves fast, looks great (and sounds good too), and it keeps your attention. Remember, it doesn’t need to be a comedy for people to enjoy it.
  • Educate people with a simple message. This campaign could have included page after page and chart after chart showing the impact of exercise on blood sugar. Instead, they go with the ultimate “product demo.” Try it for yourself and see what happens. The idea is simple, easy to understand, and again, not a giant commitment for people, which dramatically increases the likelihood of them doing it.
  • It’s not a product ad. That’s right, it’s an “unbranded” campaign. You have to look around a bit to see that Roche is involved and which products they sell that are related to diabetes. Know this, people who care always know who the good guys (or bad guys) are. You don’t have to shove it into people’s faces. They’re smart. They’ll figure it out.
  • Get the right people to talk about it. That part is clearly working well…you’re reading this now aren’t you? You should know who the people are that can do the talking for you and can spread your message usually much more effectively than you can.

I hope you see some good lessons you can use if you’re looking to do a campaign like this. If you did find this helpful, how about watching the video and spreading the word? If you’re a person with diabetes, I hope you’ll actually do the test on November 14 and share your results. Even if you know the impact of exercise, sharing your findings will help build awareness among those that don’t.

So, you’re homework today…watch a video, share it with others (try the ShareThis button and pick your favorite social site), and help save a life…not too much to ask, right?

Applying Some Sanity to a Regulatory Debate

Okay…today’s post is a bit of a rant, but I think it’ll include some practical, rationale advice that will help you too. As you can tell by the featured image for this post, I find myself out of ideas on how to explain my point in a calm, bullet-pointed way, so I’m going with the rant approach. I’d like to thank a number of you for both adding clarity to my thoughts and for being the very inspiration behind this post (you each know who you are).

What am I so annoyed at?

Conservatism.

Not the political ideology…the approach to marketing and specifically legal and regulatory concerns. To be sure, I’ve been one of the biggest defenders of the legal and regulatory teams at various companies. It’s not an easy job. You’ve got people like me telling you that you’re crazy and bashing their skulls against your walls when you won’t let them do something we we’d like. But at the same time, you save us from ourselves sometimes. As one of my favorite regulatory people once said, “I’m not telling you that you can’t do it, DDMAC [i.e., the FDA] is telling you that you can’t do it.” Substitute your own industry’s watchdog group in that quote if you’d like.

That somehow managed to get me off the ledge a few times and made me redirect my ire to more appropriate targets. However, after working with many, many companies over the past couple of years, I’ve realized one thing: it isn’t always DDMAC after all. Certainly it is sometimes, but other times, perhaps more times, it’s us. We’re not really mad that the FDA is preventing us from doing something, we’re mad that our own company won’t. Again, many of these rules exist to protect the company and make a lot of sense. I get that and I’m not advocating for anarchy, but I am advocating for a bit of common sense (perhaps I should have used a picture of Thomas Paine’s essay instead of the Sanity picture…nah).

The one “rule” that is making me crazy lately deals with the concept and interpretation of “sponsorship.” Allow me to explain what I mean by this. This might be something like when a company pays to have their content included on a website in something like a special information section. WebMD has a number of these. The regulatory challenge is that since the company is paying for the placement of this content, even though they don’t control the site in any other way (e.g., WebMD), the company is, of course, still responsible for the content itself. That is, they can’t include wildly off-label or inaccurate information simply because it’s not on their own website (here’s an example of one of these pages). Got that…makes total sense.

Here’s where I get annoyed…someone along the way has taken this regulation WAY too far. It seems that everything is treated as a “sponsorship” and what is in the control of the company and what it is liable for has been absurdly expanded. It’s no longer just sponsored “sections” or pages, it’s now ads as well. Allow me to demonstrate.

Rather than have a sponsored section on WebMD, you place a banner ad on WebMD. Okay. No problem, right? Wrong.

The new regulatory concern these days is figuring out what page the ad is placed on and what content surrounds it. Similarly, for the sponsored page, what other content, but that is not controlled by the company, is included on the page? The rationale?

Here’s an almost direct quote that I heard last week: “If we placed and paid to have something on the site, then we’re responsible for whatever is around it even if we have no control whatsoever over what’s around it.”

Seriously?

I’ve heard this from five different companies in the past two weeks. It’s a trend.

It’s leading to some behavior I find odd and unnecessary. For example, one company has removed their Facebook page because they were concerned about the ads (that Facebook controls) being placed next to their page’s content. What? The rationale from the legal and regulatory teams is that the company is somehow responsible for the content of those ads and the ads could expand the product’s claims and….

I don’t know what came after that…my ears stopped working, but I think you can fill in the blanks. I understand not wanting to have your ad next to an article bashing your product. That’s another story. That’s not desirable certainly, but it’s also not a violation of any laws.

So, let’s look at this rationally. First, this phenomenon appears to be especially acute on any site that you could remotely categorize as “social media.” That is, the rules seem a bit more lax when we’re not talking about Facebook. Social media always seems to make people panic. This tends to create a few interesting double standards. We’ll come back to that in a minute.

First, I want to share a perfect analogy that explains why all of this is so crazy. It comes from Peter Pitts, a former Associate Commissioner at the FDA and current partner at PR firm, Porter Novelli. I’d encourage you to read his entire commentary found in this white paper, but here’s the part I loved:

“…what does “sponsored mean? Let’s do a brief thought experiment. Consider a televised PGA tour event. When a product logo for an erectile dysfunction medicine appears on the screen and the announcer intones, “This portion of the Masters is sponsored by DRUG NAME HERE,” nobody out there in the viewing audience takes that to mean the “sponsor” has chosen the speed of the greens, the height of the rough or the pairing of golfers in the tournament. But say “sponsored” on a social media site and watch the sparks fly at internal regulatory review.”

Question for all of you: does that one simple statement make all of this debate about what you are responsible for seem a bit ridiculous all of a sudden? It did for me. It points out a perfectly created double standard that keeps social media as a pariah and “traditional” channels on the whitelist. Allow me to elaborate.

First, from Peter’s analogy, it’s okay if we “sponsor” a sporting event (or Race for the Cure or a NASCAR) and it doesn’t matter what appears next to our sponsorship. We don’t control, as Peter said, the pairings of golfers. Everyone’s fine with that. No one would assume otherwise because assuming otherwise would be insane.

But there’s more…

We don’t worry about what commercial follows ours on TV or what the news story leads into our commercial during the evening news.

We don’t care what ads appear above or below ours or what results appear on the same page as our paid Google AdWords.

We don’t think about what billboard is next to ours or what buildings it is near.

We don’t agonize over which stories are printed next to our ads in a magazine.

We don’t fret about which ads show up next to (or as a pre-roll to) our YouTube videos or channels. For example, here’s one of J&J’s videos (see red boxes):

I didn’t even bother highlighting the “Promoted Video” right under AOL’s ad.

So, how come regulatory and legal folks seem to be fine when we’re talking about TV, billboards, print, YouTube, Google, and yet worry about Facebook and some other places?

The FDA has never (read that last word again) told anyone that they are responsible for content they don’t control. So, if you place an ad or sponsor a section of a website, you should only need to worry about what you can control. You can control the content of what you give to the website to publish. That’s it. Of course, if you actually control more than that, then you’ve got a different issue. But you don’t control what ads show up next to your page on Facebook, so you’re not responsible for worrying about whether or not they cause your content to be in violation (side note: Facebook can actually turn off those ads in some cases, contact me if you need help).

Some of you might be saying that there’s a distinction between placing an ad (like a banner) and having a sponsored section. No way. You create the content for both and you dictate where each appears. For the sponsored section, you know where it’s going to go on the third party site (e.g., where on WebMD). For banner ads, you should know every single place where they show up. If not, talk with your media buying agency and get that info from them now. In each case, you created the content and helped decide on the placement. What you don’t get to decide is everything else that appears around it. Not the search results next to your Google AdWords, not the billboard under yours, not the TV commercial that follows your…none of these. Since you don’t control this why do you feel responsible? Why do you think that the FDA is going to come down on you? Show me one example and I’ll leave you alone.

We call these “ghost rules” around our office and they only do one thing really well: kill good thinking and innovation.

Rant over…thanks.

Social Media Supplement, Issue 4 – More Facebook Insights

This issue includes several interesting studies surrounding Facebook’s News Feed as well as Likes for brands, as well as e-commerce. On to this week’s news!  Did we miss something?  Feel free to DM me during the week and we’ll review submissions for the next post! Click here to catch up on past issues.

Facebook News Feed Results Cracked

In an experiment by The Daily Beast believes it has cracked the code as to how the Facebook News Feed works.  Some of this is common knowledge, but there are a few outcomes that are intriguing such as the bias it has on new members to Facebook. We had a post about this a while back right here on Dose of Digital: Why Your Facebook Page Doesn’t Exist.

Do Photos of People Improve ECommerce Conversion?

Great examples of A|B testing.  People verses Images verses Text… who helps close on the call to action best?  Have you played with where the model’s eyes are looking before?  I thought the test with Sunsilk was fascinating but it makes sense.

Ads Drive the Most “Likes” for Brands on Facebook

eMarketer reports that 75% of people that liked a brand on Facebook because of an ad or another form of direct outreach.  Surprisingly, invitations and referrals from friends took second place at 59%.  While still a substantial number, I would have thought that the old “people trust their friends more than brands” train of thought would have applied here.  I suppose sometimes people just need a that direct nudge.

Also in the study, was reasons for unsubscribing from a brand, which 36% of responders had done. Top reasons cited include losing interest in the brand, frequency (or lack thereof) of updates and uninteresting content.

Microsoft Launches its own Games on Demand Online Market

Gamers be glad.  Microsoft is creating a hub for downloading digital copies of games.  This will include oldies but goodies as well as new releases.  The market will launch with over 100 titles in its library.

Amazon Offers Free Web Services

Potential cloud computing users can try before they buy now with Amazon’s Web Services.  You can learn more about this free usage tier here: http://aws.amazon.com/free/

Netflix Web Video Streaming Through the Roof [Chart]

Number of subscribers streaming videos more than doubled year to year.  As the article points out, Netflix successfully shifted from just a DVD rental company to one of the most lucrative web video companies in the world.

“We Hate Your .com” Comes to Life

For those of you who attended the recent e-Patient Connections conference, you got a chance to hear me present my manifesto: “We Hate Your .com” (which seemed to get pretty good reviews from what I understand). As a further challenge, I was told I had to do the presentation in Pecha Kucha format. For those not familiar, Pecha Kucha means you get 20 slides that each stay on the screen for 20 seconds. They advance automatically and the presenter doesn’t get to control them. 6 minutes and 40 seconds total. It’s the USA Today of speeches. I personally like it.

So, what is “We Hate Your .com” all about?

The premise is simple:

As digital spreads to every facet of our lives, marketers are trying to figure out how to use it to get their message out to the masses. The average marketer is still struggling with how to effectively do marketing online. Rather than finding enthusiastic supporters of their latest digital effort, they watch their programs go unnoticed and ignored by customers. Even the “lucky” ones who manage to be noticed are often quickly abandoned. But for a select few, there is an entirely different outcome. These programs are not only noticed, but become fixtures in consumers’ lives.

Question is…are you creating digital marketing people love or love to hate?

So, what’s your answer?

The folks at Kru Research, who put on this conference, put together a great video of my presentation (with sponsorship help from Klick Pharma). I decided I didn’t just want to let the video float out there all on its own on YouTube and many of you asked me for a copy of my slides, so I’m trying something different.

Head on over to WeHateYour.com and get the full treatment: an overview of the concept, including a bunch of images, the video of my presentation, and a link to download my slides. You also have the chance to “Like” We Hate Your .com on Facebook. If you do, you’re pledging that you won’t commit any of the digital marketing sins that I talk about. If you can’t commit to that, then you probably shouldn’t join up. We’ll kick you out…seriously.

Enjoy it. While you’re there, please visit the contact form and let me know if you want to nomination a digital marketing program for the good or bad list. I’ll be keeping a running commentary on the blog there.

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »